Friday, July 3, 2026
ADVT 
National

CERB to be extended eight weeks: PM

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Jun, 2020 06:09 PM
  • CERB to be extended eight weeks: PM

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says his government's signature benefit for people whose jobs have vanished amid the COVID-19 pandemic will be extended by eight weeks.

The Canada Emergency Response Benefit has paid $500 a week for a maximum of 16 weeks depending on when people signed up for the help either because they lost their jobs or saw their hours drastically slashed due to the pandemic.

The first cohort of applicants who signed up in April are set to soon max out their payment period in early July, with worries some wouldn't have jobs to go back to and others unable to work due to health reasons.

Trudeau says the economy is recovering from the mass closures ordered to fight the spread of the novel coronavirus, but there's a long way to go. He says that the government will look at international best practices to determine what further changes will be needed.

An extension will add to the cost of the benefit, which has already paid out $43.51 billion as of June 4 and carries a budget of $60 billion. The parliamentary budget officer in a report last week estimated that extending the maximum number of weeks from 16 to 28, and extending the program through to January 2021, would cost about $57.9 billion.

Trudeau didn't provide a spending figure today, but says the government's hope is that fewer people will need the CERB as restrictions ease and businesses reopen. Extending the CERB has been a demand from the New Democrats in exchange for the party's support for the minority Liberals in an upcoming confidence vote. The supplementary spending estimates detail roughly $81 billion in already approved spending and about $6 billion more in measures MPs are set to vote on.

But budget officer Yves Giroux notes in a report this morning that a number of measures promised by the government aren't included because they don't come out of what's known as the consolidated revenue fund. Left out of the estimates are cost details on the $45-billion wage-subsidy program delivered through the tax system, and a loan program to small- and medium-sized businesses that will open applications to a wider number of companies on Friday. "While these supplementary estimates include a significant amount of the spending announced by the government in response to the global pandemic, it does not include all of the planned spending," Giroux writes. "Thus, it does not provide parliamentarians with a complete picture of how much the government will spend on COVID-19 response measures."

Giroux warns it will be difficult to get answers about the estimates from federal officials because MPs will only debate the estimates for four hours under a deal agreed to last month by a majority of MPs. The Conservatives and Bloc Quebecois have been demanding more transparency from the government around its spending and fiscal projections.

MORE National ARTICLES

NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh Names Montreal MP Boulerice As Deputy Leader

MONTREAL — NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh is naming Montreal MP Alexandre Boulerice deputy leader in hopes of boosting the party's fortunes in Quebec.

NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh Names Montreal MP Boulerice As Deputy Leader

British Columbia Man Died In Ethiopia Plane Crash: Reports

An environmentalist from British Columbia is being identified in media reports as one of the victims in Sunday's deadly crash of an Ethiopian Airlines plane.

British Columbia Man Died In Ethiopia Plane Crash: Reports

Increase Wolf Cull, Pen Pregnant Cows To Save Endangered Caribou: Study

Increase Wolf Cull, Pen Pregnant Cows To Save Endangered Caribou: Study
"It's go hard or go home," said Rob Serrouya, a University of Alberta biologist and lead author of the study released Monday in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Increase Wolf Cull, Pen Pregnant Cows To Save Endangered Caribou: Study

Ottawa Professor Who Died In Ethiopia Plane Crash Remembered For Public Outreach

Ottawa professor Pius Adesanmi, one of the 18 Canadians killed in Sunday's Ethiopian Airlines crash, is being remembered as a public intellectual whose outreach to Africans across the glob

Ottawa Professor Who Died In Ethiopia Plane Crash Remembered For Public Outreach

Utah Plaintiffs Seek To Force Omar Khadr To Answer Their Questions

Relatives looking to collect on an American lawsuit against Omar Khadr are asking a Canadian court to force the former Guantanamo Bay prisoner

Utah Plaintiffs Seek To Force Omar Khadr To Answer Their Questions

Detectives Appeal For Assistance In Fatal Shooting Of Chilliwack, B.C., Man

Detectives Appeal For Assistance In Fatal Shooting Of Chilliwack, B.C., Man
CHILLIWACK, B.C. — Police detectives have identified a man who was shot and killed in Chilliwack, B.C., on the weekend.

Detectives Appeal For Assistance In Fatal Shooting Of Chilliwack, B.C., Man